They don't hatch their egg's they just protect them until their old enough to protect them self.
Yes, they are a reptile.
No. They are on their own the moment they hatch out of their eggs.
They live with its own kind before the eggs hatch
since they lay eggs it can hatch up to 10 or more eggs!
The breeding season for king cobras begins in January. The female will lay her eggs two months after mating. The eggs incubate for 60 to 70 days before they hatch.
Male and female snakes mate for life. Baby snakes come from eggs. When they are born the Mother just shows them how to hunt and then they are gone. This happens several weeks after they are hatched. Eggs may take 60-70 days to hatch. Female King Cobras lay up to 20 to 50 eggs. The eggs are usually white. The female King Cobra will do anything to protect its eggs, even if it has to attack one of the strongest animals.
The female cobra lays the eggs.
There are quite a few species that do that. Cobras and some pythons are two well-known species to incubate their eggs by coiling around them.
The mother king cobra makes a nest and cares for the eggs for about two to three months. When the eggs begin to hatch she abandons the nest and leaves so that she will not accidentally eat her babies. The babies are capable of caring for themselves as soon as they hatch.
Some (but not all) cobras defend their eggs aggressively while they're incubating. Once the eggs hatch, the baby snakes are completely independent from the moment they appear - and just as deadly as the adults !
Baby cobras are laid, not birthed. In general cobras lay 12 to 60 eggs at once (depending on breed), and it is rare that all of them hatch at the same time, so the best guess is the whole nest timing - 12 to 60 all together.
Yes, snakes hatch from eggs.